Auvergne (since 1531), west of Limousin (Cantal, Puy-de-Dome).
Lyonnais (since 1307), northeast of Auvergne (Loire, Rhone).
Burgundy (since 1476), south of Champagne (Ain, Saone et Loire, Cote d’or, Yonne).
Franche Comte (since 1674), nearest Switzerland (Haute-Saone, Jura, Doubs).
Dauphine (since 1349), between the Alps and the Rhone Channel (Isere, Drome, Hautes, Alpes).
Savoie (since 1860), south of Lake of Geneva (Savoie, Haute-Savoie).
Languedoc (since 1271), along the Mediterranean, west of the Rhone (Ardeche, Haute-Loire, Lozere, Gard, Herault, Tarn, Haute-Garonne, Aude).
Guyenne (since 1453), in the basin of the Garonne, southwest (Aveyron, Lot, Dordogne, Tarn et Garonne, Lot et Garonne, Gironde).
Gascogne (since 1453), in the southwest, old Aquitaine (Landes, Gers, Hautes-Pyrenees).
Bearn and Navarre (since 1607) (Basses Pyrenees).